Waterlooboy2hp
Well-known member
I was sprucing up a few vises and wondered about the ID on 2 of the 4, that I was fussing with.
1st one is a common swivel type bench vise. Not very large, but pretty stout, for it`s size. No ID, except for the number 3V7627 cast into the underside of the base. It has 3 1/8" jaws. I replaced the 1/4" thick jaw inserts, with some I made from 3/8" material. The jaw screws are the type with the long taper on them. All threads on the vise are American.
I also added a small roll pin near the end of the slide, to prevent operating the vise at the very end of the lead-screw thread. The unit weighs, just under 10.5 pounds. Had it stored away in a box, for maybe 30 years. Time to put it to use. Would fit very well on my #425 Work-Mate, or maybe just a decoration in the living room. ---
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The 2ed is a complete mystery to me. Looks to be part of a machine. Very well made, with a horizontal V-groove in the moving, rear sliding jaw. Also has a ball type thrust bearing on the lead-screw. A ball D-dent allows the handle to lock in 3 positions. Jaws are 2 1/8" wide and open to 3". I have plans for this vise, but don`t know what it was used for.
The other 2 vises, that I was cleaning up, were just an old Boller and an AMF Float-Loc vise. ___ John
1st one is a common swivel type bench vise. Not very large, but pretty stout, for it`s size. No ID, except for the number 3V7627 cast into the underside of the base. It has 3 1/8" jaws. I replaced the 1/4" thick jaw inserts, with some I made from 3/8" material. The jaw screws are the type with the long taper on them. All threads on the vise are American.
I also added a small roll pin near the end of the slide, to prevent operating the vise at the very end of the lead-screw thread. The unit weighs, just under 10.5 pounds. Had it stored away in a box, for maybe 30 years. Time to put it to use. Would fit very well on my #425 Work-Mate, or maybe just a decoration in the living room. ---
=====================
The 2ed is a complete mystery to me. Looks to be part of a machine. Very well made, with a horizontal V-groove in the moving, rear sliding jaw. Also has a ball type thrust bearing on the lead-screw. A ball D-dent allows the handle to lock in 3 positions. Jaws are 2 1/8" wide and open to 3". I have plans for this vise, but don`t know what it was used for.
The other 2 vises, that I was cleaning up, were just an old Boller and an AMF Float-Loc vise. ___ John
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